Henigman and Rudy both through to the NCAA Finals
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Henigman and Rudy both through to the NCAA Finals
Haven't seen this posted yet, but so far both Josh Henigman and Elli Rudy have advanced through the Prelims at the NCAA championships and are going to be competing in the finals. Henigman placed 12th in the prelims to grab the last finals qualifying spot on Wednesday and Elli Rudy tied with 16 others at the top height to move on to the finals. Erin Jones Graf is competing in the heptathalon today and tomorrow. Finals for Henigman in the hammer are today at noon and finals for Rudy in the Pole Vault are tomorrow. Results can be found at http://www.flashresults.com/2006_Meets/outdoor/ncaa1/ I believe one article that I saw said there would be some TV coverage of the championships tomorrow, perhaps Rudy or Graf will even get a little air time.
Congrats to these three athletes and entire Track and Field program, an outstanding showing!
Congrats to these three athletes and entire Track and Field program, an outstanding showing!
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Henigman ended up 8th scoring 1 pt. for the BOBCATS. What a great year. I also love seeing the record holder Lance Deal.
Event 19 Men Hammer Throw
=================================================================================
Auto: 67.00 Advance best 12 and ties from qualify to finals
20 minutes warm-up for each flight, 10 minutes before finals.
Advance best 9 plus ties to a reverse order final.
American: 82.52m 9/7/1996 Lance Deal, NYAC
College Best: 82.56m 8/23/1995 Balazs Kiss, USC
NCAA Meet: 80.86m 5/31/1996 Balazs Kiss, USC
Hornet Stad: 78.87m 7/21/2000 Lanca Deal, NYAC
Name Year School Finals Points
=================================================================================
Finals
1 Spyridon Jullien SR Virginia Tech 72.29m 237-02 10
65.38m 69.66m 70.58m FOUL FOUL 72.29m
2 Mattias Jons SR Boise State 71.31m 233-11 8
69.03m 66.21m FOUL FOUL 71.31m 70.99m
3 Nick Owens JR North Carolina 70.02m 229-09 6
67.10m 69.39m 68.16m FOUL 70.02m 68.52m
4 Mohsen Anani FR Virginia Tech 68.35m 224-03 5
68.35m 68.06m FOUL FOUL FOUL FOUL
5 Egor Agafonov SO Kansas 66.82m 219-03 4
66.82m FOUL FOUL FOUL 66.55m FOUL
6 Matej Muza FR Virginia Tech 66.03m 216-08 3
63.55m 64.61m 65.04m 64.16m 66.03m 64.52m
7 Adam Midles SO Southern California 65.87m 216-01 2
64.79m 65.43m 64.11m 64.86m 65.87m 65.41m
8 Josh Henigman SR Montana State 64.29m 210-11 1
62.41m 64.29m 61.81m FOUL 63.33m 63.70m
9 Michael Beerer SR Irvine 63.83m 209-05
FOUL 63.83m 60.71m 59.38m FOUL 60.60m
10 Paul Peulich SO Manhattan 63.63m 208-09
FOUL 60.35m 63.63m
11 Wil Fleming SR Indiana 62.94m 206-06
62.94m FOUL FOUL
12 Martin Bingisser SR Washington 62.83m 206-02
62.83m FOUL FOUL
Event 19 Men Hammer Throw
=================================================================================
Auto: 67.00 Advance best 12 and ties from qualify to finals
20 minutes warm-up for each flight, 10 minutes before finals.
Advance best 9 plus ties to a reverse order final.
American: 82.52m 9/7/1996 Lance Deal, NYAC
College Best: 82.56m 8/23/1995 Balazs Kiss, USC
NCAA Meet: 80.86m 5/31/1996 Balazs Kiss, USC
Hornet Stad: 78.87m 7/21/2000 Lanca Deal, NYAC
Name Year School Finals Points
=================================================================================
Finals
1 Spyridon Jullien SR Virginia Tech 72.29m 237-02 10
65.38m 69.66m 70.58m FOUL FOUL 72.29m
2 Mattias Jons SR Boise State 71.31m 233-11 8
69.03m 66.21m FOUL FOUL 71.31m 70.99m
3 Nick Owens JR North Carolina 70.02m 229-09 6
67.10m 69.39m 68.16m FOUL 70.02m 68.52m
4 Mohsen Anani FR Virginia Tech 68.35m 224-03 5
68.35m 68.06m FOUL FOUL FOUL FOUL
5 Egor Agafonov SO Kansas 66.82m 219-03 4
66.82m FOUL FOUL FOUL 66.55m FOUL
6 Matej Muza FR Virginia Tech 66.03m 216-08 3
63.55m 64.61m 65.04m 64.16m 66.03m 64.52m
7 Adam Midles SO Southern California 65.87m 216-01 2
64.79m 65.43m 64.11m 64.86m 65.87m 65.41m
8 Josh Henigman SR Montana State 64.29m 210-11 1
62.41m 64.29m 61.81m FOUL 63.33m 63.70m
9 Michael Beerer SR Irvine 63.83m 209-05
FOUL 63.83m 60.71m 59.38m FOUL 60.60m
10 Paul Peulich SO Manhattan 63.63m 208-09
FOUL 60.35m 63.63m
11 Wil Fleming SR Indiana 62.94m 206-06
62.94m FOUL FOUL
12 Martin Bingisser SR Washington 62.83m 206-02
62.83m FOUL FOUL
Sports is not bigger than life
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That's AWESOME! Congratulations to him!
Also, Jones-Graf is in 9th after the first days' four events of the heptathalon.
Also, Jones-Graf is in 9th after the first days' four events of the heptathalon.
Code: Select all
NCAA Division I 2006 Outdoor
Track & Field Championship
Sacramento, CA - 6/7/2006 to 6/10/2006
Last Completed Event
Women Heptathlon
Points 100H HJ SP 200 Day1 LJ JT 800
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 Jacquelyn Johnson 13.34 1.78m 10.46m 24.44
Arizona State w: -0.1 5-10 34-04 w: +0.0
SO 3526 (1074) (953) (560) (939) 3526 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
2 Tracy Partain 13.69 1.75m 11.63m 24.43
Missouri State w: -0.1 5-08.75 38-02 w: +0.0
SR 3516 (1023) (916) (637) (940) 3516 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
3 Julie J Pickler 14.20 1.72m 12.68m 24.68
Washington State w: -0.1 5-07.75 41-07.25 w: +0.0
JR 3451 (950) (879) (706) (916) 3451 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
3 Diana D Pickler 14.46 1.78m 11.58m 24.31
Washington State w: -0.1 5-10 38-00 w: +0.0
JR 3451 (914) (953) (633) (951) 3451 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
5 Elizabeth Roehrig 14.38 1.72m 12.95m 24.76
Minnesota w: -0.5 5-07.75 42-06 w: -0.8
SO 3437 (925) (879) (724) (909) 3437 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
6 Lauryn Jordan 14.25 1.69m 12.08m 24.79
Oregon w: -0.7 5-06.5 39-07.75 w: +0.0
SR 3357 (943) (842) (666) (906) 3357 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
7 Saskia Triesscheijn 14.30 1.69m 13.36m 26.09
Virginia Tech w: -0.5 5-06.5 43-10 w: -1.9
SR 3318 (936) (842) (751) (789) 3318 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
8 Megan Akre 13.87 1.66m 10.14m 24.72
LSU w: -0.1 5-05.25 33-03.25 w: +0.0
SR 3255 (997) (806) (539) (913) 3255 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
9 Erin Jones-Graf 14.15 1.69m 11.83m 26.08
Montana State w: -0.1 5-06.5 38-09.75 w: -1.9
SR 3239 (957) (842) (650) (790) 3239 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
10 Lacey Hulbert 14.79 1.72m 11.86m 25.95
Utah State w: -0.5 5-07.75 38-11 w: -2.4
SR 3203 (870) (879) (652) (802) 3203 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
11 Jillian Drouin 14.61 1.78m 10.85m 26.36
Syracuse w: -0.5 5-10 35-07.25 w: -2.4
SO 3198 (894) (953) (585) (766) 3198 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
12 Sara Jane Baker 14.81 1.75m 11.36m 26.05
Nebraska w: 0.9 5-08.75 37-03.25 w: -1.9
SR 3195 (867) (916) (619) (793) 3195 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
13 Garnetta Holloway 14.82 1.63m 12.00m 24.99
Vanderbilt w: 0.9 5-04.25 39-04.5 w: -0.8
JR 3186 (866) (771) (661) (888) 3186 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
14 Katie Lloyd 14.49 1.72m 11.61m 26.56
Colorado State w: -0.7 5-07.75 38-01.25 w: -1.9
JR 3173 (910) (879) (635) (749) 3173 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
15 Rachel Easley 14.76 1.69m 12.17m 26.37
Houston w: -0.7 5-06.5 39-11.25 w: -2.4
JR 3153 (874) (842) (672) (765) 3153 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
16 Annett Wichmann 15.24 1.69m 13.94m 27.04
Hawaii-Manoa w: 0.9 5-06.5 45-09 w: -1.9
FR 3150 (810) (842) (790) (708) 3150 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
16 Jamie Greubel 14.68 1.66m 11.29m 25.45
Cornell w: 0.9 5-05.25 37-00.5 w: -0.8
SR 3150 (884) (806) (614) (846) 3150 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
18 Gunild Kreb 14.64 1.60m 13.12m 26.37
Virginia Tech w: 0.9 5-03 43-00.5 w: -1.9
SR 3126 (890) (736) (735) (765) 3126 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
19 Bettie Wade 16.21 1.75m 12.06m 25.42
Michigan w: -0.7 5-08.75 39-07 w: -0.8
FR 3119 (689) (916) (665) (849) 3119 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
20 Buky Bamigboye 14.60 1.63m 10.68m 25.39
Georgetown w: -0.5 5-04.25 35-00.5 w: -0.8
FR 3091 (895) (771) (574) (851) 3091 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
21 Sarah Gretzmacher 14.76 1.75m 11.02m 27.14
Georgia w: 0.9 5-08.75 36-02 w: -1.9
JR 3086 (874) (916) (596) (700) 3086 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
22 Crystal Chang 14.84 1.69m 10.68m 26.29
Stephen F. Austin w: 0.9 5-06.5 35-00.5 w: -2.4
SR 3051 (863) (842) (574) (772) 3051 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
23 Erica Lynn 14.59 1.63m 10.56m 26.01
Iowa State w: -0.7 5-04.25 34-07.75 w: -2.4
SR 3030 (897) (771) (566) (796) 3030 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
24 Kalindra McFadden 14.69 1.54m 11.70m 25.66
Oregon w: -0.5 5-00.5 38-04.75 w: -0.8
FR 3017 (883) (666) (641) (827) 3017 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
25 Kasey Hill 14.81 1.57m 11.51m 25.89
Boston College w: -0.1 5-01.75 37-09.25 w: -0.8
JR 3004 (867) (701) (629) (807) 3004 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
25 Ashley Reyer 14.78 1.66m 10.11m 26.08
Southern Mississipp w: -0.5 5-05.25 33-02 w: -2.4
JR 3004 (871) (806) (537) (790) 3004 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
27 Shevell Quinley 14.93 1.54m 8.56m 24.48
Arizona w: -0.7 5-00.5 28-01 w: +0.0
FR 2888 (851) (666) (436) (935) 2888 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
28 Jennifer McCoy 14.41 1.54m FOUL 26.76
Ball State w: -0.7 5-00.5 w: -2.4
SR 2319 (921) (666) (0) (732) 2319 (0) (0) (0)
----------------------------------------------------------------------“Arguing with anonymous strangers on the Internet is a sucker's game because they almost always turn out to be—or to be indistinguishable from—self-righteous sixteen-year-olds possessing infinite amounts of free time.” -- Neal Stephenson, Cryptonomicon
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Congrats to Josh! Great performance!!
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- Montana State senior Josh Henigman capped a
tumultuous senior season on Friday by achieving his dream, capturing
All-America honors in the hammer throw at the 2006 NCAA Outdoor Track and
Field Championships in Sacramento.
Henigman's toss of 210-11 on his second throw was just inches from
his school record mark of 211-3 set two weeks ago at the NCAA Midwest
Regional Championships, and stood up for eighth place at the NCAA meet.
"Josh had a really strong performance," said MSU coach Dale Kennedy.
"Each of his throws were solid. This is a great way for him to finish his
career, and we couldn't be more thrilled for him."
By garnering All-America honors, Henigman, a senior from Bridger,
became Montana State's 11th All-American, and the first since Lyle Weese in
2002. He also became the third Bobcat thrower to earn elite honors, joining
Olympian Lance Deal in 1984 and Ken Christison in 1963, but only the second
man in Big Sky history to earn All-America honors in the hammer (joining
Nevada's Kim Johansson, who finished seventh in 1991). His 210-foot throw is
the best ever by a Big Sky hammer thrower.
Two other Bobcats chase All-America status on Saturday. Erin
Jones-Graf finished the first day of the heptathlon competition with 3,239
points, 13 points more than her previous best first-day total and in ninth
place. She posted the first-day PR on the strength of multi-event personal
bests in the shot put (38-9.75) and high jump (5-6.5).
"Everything's going better than I could have hoped," the Harlowton
senior said. "The shot put, I just really worked on that and figured it out
the last three weeks. I want to stay calm and relaxed (heading into
Saturday's second day of competition), but stay focused. I can get antsy
pretty easy. If I get too focused things don't go as well, so I need to
force myself to relax and just try to have fun."
Sophomore pole vaulter Ellie Rudy also competes on Saturday. The
Woodland Park, Colo., product stands 12th out of 16 after one round of
competition. "Ellie had some good looks (on Thursday)," Kennedy said. "I
think she's ready to have a good, solid day on Saturday."
-msu-
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- Montana State senior Josh Henigman capped a
tumultuous senior season on Friday by achieving his dream, capturing
All-America honors in the hammer throw at the 2006 NCAA Outdoor Track and
Field Championships in Sacramento.
Henigman's toss of 210-11 on his second throw was just inches from
his school record mark of 211-3 set two weeks ago at the NCAA Midwest
Regional Championships, and stood up for eighth place at the NCAA meet.
"Josh had a really strong performance," said MSU coach Dale Kennedy.
"Each of his throws were solid. This is a great way for him to finish his
career, and we couldn't be more thrilled for him."
By garnering All-America honors, Henigman, a senior from Bridger,
became Montana State's 11th All-American, and the first since Lyle Weese in
2002. He also became the third Bobcat thrower to earn elite honors, joining
Olympian Lance Deal in 1984 and Ken Christison in 1963, but only the second
man in Big Sky history to earn All-America honors in the hammer (joining
Nevada's Kim Johansson, who finished seventh in 1991). His 210-foot throw is
the best ever by a Big Sky hammer thrower.
Two other Bobcats chase All-America status on Saturday. Erin
Jones-Graf finished the first day of the heptathlon competition with 3,239
points, 13 points more than her previous best first-day total and in ninth
place. She posted the first-day PR on the strength of multi-event personal
bests in the shot put (38-9.75) and high jump (5-6.5).
"Everything's going better than I could have hoped," the Harlowton
senior said. "The shot put, I just really worked on that and figured it out
the last three weeks. I want to stay calm and relaxed (heading into
Saturday's second day of competition), but stay focused. I can get antsy
pretty easy. If I get too focused things don't go as well, so I need to
force myself to relax and just try to have fun."
Sophomore pole vaulter Ellie Rudy also competes on Saturday. The
Woodland Park, Colo., product stands 12th out of 16 after one round of
competition. "Ellie had some good looks (on Thursday)," Kennedy said. "I
think she's ready to have a good, solid day on Saturday."
-msu-
FTG!!
[quote="GrizinWashington"]The Griz suck.
[quote=" tampa_griz"] (because China isn't a part of "Asia") .....


[quote="GrizinWashington"]The Griz suck.
[quote=" tampa_griz"] (because China isn't a part of "Asia") .....


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cat_thrower
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There should be something coming from MSU, but from what I can get Ellie Rudy tied for 6th in the pole vault and Erin Jones Graf finished 9th in the heptathlon.
Great job all around by these three MSU athletes!!

Great job all around by these three MSU athletes!!
FTG!!
[quote="GrizinWashington"]The Griz suck.
[quote=" tampa_griz"] (because China isn't a part of "Asia") .....


[quote="GrizinWashington"]The Griz suck.
[quote=" tampa_griz"] (because China isn't a part of "Asia") .....


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Cat Grad
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mchammer
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What a great experience this was. All three athletes performed very well and achieved all-american in Div I. These three bring out total to 17 DI all-americans in cross country and track and field. That's three more plaques for the wall. Josh was the third American in the hammer. Six of the 12 finalists were foreign. Ellie had to vault 13' 5" just to make it into the finals. Erin was completely focused and set three lifetime bests, with two other near-lifetime bests, and broke her own school record again. Coach Eitel did a great job of preparing Ellie and Erin, and coaching them through the Championships. He is a very good coach, and very humble about what he does.
A hammer handle broke during the men's hammer and sent the hammer zipping under the net along the ground and into the stands at about 30 mph. One guy raised his feet just in time. I've never seen that before. Neither had Lance Deal, now coaching for Oregon. Three of his women achieved all-american in the throws. It's good to be back.
Mike Carignan
A hammer handle broke during the men's hammer and sent the hammer zipping under the net along the ground and into the stands at about 30 mph. One guy raised his feet just in time. I've never seen that before. Neither had Lance Deal, now coaching for Oregon. Three of his women achieved all-american in the throws. It's good to be back.
Mike Carignan
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A big congrats to the athletes and to you Mike! Your coaching deserves credit as well! Will anyone be participating in Indy next weekend?mchammer wrote:What a great experience this was. All three athletes performed very well and achieved all-american in Div I. These three bring out total to 17 DI all-americans in cross country and track and field. That's three more plaques for the wall. Josh was the third American in the hammer. Six of the 12 finalists were foreign. Ellie had to vault 13' 5" just to make it into the finals. Erin was completely focused and set three lifetime bests, with two other near-lifetime bests, and broke her own school record again. Coach Eitel did a great job of preparing Ellie and Erin, and coaching them through the Championships. He is a very good coach, and very humble about what he does.
A hammer handle broke during the men's hammer and sent the hammer zipping under the net along the ground and into the stands at about 30 mph. One guy raised his feet just in time. I've never seen that before. Neither had Lance Deal, now coaching for Oregon. Three of his women achieved all-american in the throws. It's good to be back.
Mike Carignan
Randy B. - MSU '04 

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mchammer
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No one's going to Indy. Josh needed 212 to provisionally qualify, and 218 to auto qualify. He had already decided not to go anyhow, and will have his wrist repaired on the 22nd. I'm sure that Erin isn't going, and I don't think Ellie met the standard. I'm not positive about that.
There were some tense moments at Sacramento. Josh beat 5 men with better marks than him to make the top 12. Their season bests were 220, 219, 218, and about 216 ish for the other two. Then he threw better (210' 11") in the finals, beating four that qualified better. 8th place from 17th seed is very good. He was similar in the discus last year, 14th from 24th. Erin was also seeded 17th but took ninth. With only one foreign athlete ahead of her she needed 9th to achieve her dream, all-american. She and coach Eitel really knew what the field could do, and what she had to do. She drew a headwind in her 200 heat, while others ran with no wind. It's clearly unfair, but that's the way it goes. She stayed positive and focused, and very tough. Chasing her through the 800, the final event, was a woman that knew that she would be all-american if she could stay within one second of Erin. She ran two seconds better than her best, a 2:21, but Erin also ran a personal best, a 2:19. With all of the competitors (27) and variables it was just that close. Erin fought with all of her might through that 800.
So two Montana Class C athletes achieved something great for MSU, and became Bobcat legends. Josh will keep throwing. Ellie will be a soph indoors in '07, and a junior outdoors. She will no doubt improve on her best of 13' 7.75" in the vault. It's going to be exciting watching her.
There were some tense moments at Sacramento. Josh beat 5 men with better marks than him to make the top 12. Their season bests were 220, 219, 218, and about 216 ish for the other two. Then he threw better (210' 11") in the finals, beating four that qualified better. 8th place from 17th seed is very good. He was similar in the discus last year, 14th from 24th. Erin was also seeded 17th but took ninth. With only one foreign athlete ahead of her she needed 9th to achieve her dream, all-american. She and coach Eitel really knew what the field could do, and what she had to do. She drew a headwind in her 200 heat, while others ran with no wind. It's clearly unfair, but that's the way it goes. She stayed positive and focused, and very tough. Chasing her through the 800, the final event, was a woman that knew that she would be all-american if she could stay within one second of Erin. She ran two seconds better than her best, a 2:21, but Erin also ran a personal best, a 2:19. With all of the competitors (27) and variables it was just that close. Erin fought with all of her might through that 800.
So two Montana Class C athletes achieved something great for MSU, and became Bobcat legends. Josh will keep throwing. Ellie will be a soph indoors in '07, and a junior outdoors. She will no doubt improve on her best of 13' 7.75" in the vault. It's going to be exciting watching her.
Last edited by mchammer on Mon Jun 12, 2006 3:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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WolfPtCat
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Congratulations to all the coaches and athletes!! Three All-americans in 2006, that is almost unbelievable. Let me try and put this in football or basketball terms for some of the members of this board. Achieving NCAA All-American in outdoor track and field would roughly be the individual football equivalent of being drafted (rounds 1-8, not free agent signing) for the NFL. Having three All-Americans is the basketball team equivalent to winning an opening round NCAA game.
Three All-Americans in the same year is spectacular and should go a long ways in bringing in the best recruits/athletes from inside and outside the state(ND, SD, ID, WY, etc). I heard on the radio here in Wyoming that the Cats have already signed the best hurdler (State Champion in 110's and 300's at the highest classification) in the state of Wyoming this year.
Special congrats go out to Tom Eitel, who coached two of these athletes (Rudy and Jones). Bobcat Track & Field once again shows that it is one of the shiniest jewels in the crown that is MSU Athletics.
Three All-Americans in the same year is spectacular and should go a long ways in bringing in the best recruits/athletes from inside and outside the state(ND, SD, ID, WY, etc). I heard on the radio here in Wyoming that the Cats have already signed the best hurdler (State Champion in 110's and 300's at the highest classification) in the state of Wyoming this year.
Special congrats go out to Tom Eitel, who coached two of these athletes (Rudy and Jones). Bobcat Track & Field once again shows that it is one of the shiniest jewels in the crown that is MSU Athletics.
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Congratulations to these three outstanding people! To have three athletes from MSU make all-America honors is an incredible accomplishment for track and most importantly, for these wonderful people. MSU Track does things right and Rudy, Jones-Graf, and Henigman are the three finest examples you can provide. Congratulations again!
GO CATS!
It's always a good day to be a Bobcat fan!

My name is Steve, if you'd like to know.
It's always a good day to be a Bobcat fan!
My name is Steve, if you'd like to know.
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- Joined: Mon Mar 29, 2004 11:37 am
Exellent comparisons! Way to go Cats! It is a remarkeable accomplishment/victory for MSU track!WolfPtCat wrote:Congratulations to all the coaches and athletes!! Three All-americans in 2006, that is almost unbelievable. Let me try and put this in football or basketball terms for some of the members of this board. Achieving NCAA All-American in outdoor track and field would roughly be the individual football equivalent of being drafted (rounds 1-8, not free agent signing) for the NFL. Having three All-Americans is the basketball team equivalent to winning an opening round NCAA game.
Three All-Americans in the same year is spectacular and should go a long ways in bringing in the best recruits/athletes from inside and outside the state(ND, SD, ID, WY, etc). I heard on the radio here in Wyoming that the Cats have already signed the best hurdler (State Champion in 110's and 300's at the highest classification) in the state of Wyoming this year.
Special congrats go out to Tom Eitel, who coached two of these athletes (Rudy and Jones). Bobcat Track & Field once again shows that it is one of the shiniest jewels in the crown that is MSU Athletics.